Evidence presented at their trial showed they supported the terror group between 2008 and 2009, according to B. Todd Jones, a United States Attorney.

Teleconference appeal for Al-Shabaab

"Ali communicated by telephone with Somalia-based members of Al-Shabaab who requested financial assistance on behalf of the group," Jones said in a statement. "Ali often sought the money under false pretenses, contending that it was to help the poor."

In both years, authorities said, she hosted teleconferences and urged listeners to give money to the terror group instead of the poor.

In one instance, she recorded $2,100 in pledges at the conclusion of that teleconference, according to officials.

She would then funnel the funds to the terror group using various remittance companies under false names.

'Questioned by the enemy'

Ali has maintained that the funds were for the poor, but authorities said monitored phone calls reveal otherwise.

"On July 14, 2009, the day after the FBI executed a search warrant at Ali's home, she telephoned her primary Al-Shabaab contact, saying, "I was questioned by the enemy here . . . they took all my stuff and are investigating it . . . do not accept calls from anyone."

Hassan, on the other hand, made false statements when questioned by federal agents about international terrorism, Jones said.

From Minneapolis to Somalia

The sentencing Thursday is the latest in federal investigation in Minneapolis -- home to the nation's largest Somali population.

The women were among a group sentenced this week in the federal government's probe focusing on Al-Shabaab, which is believed to recruit young men in the Minneapolis area. The U.S. has designated it a terrorist group, and has said it has ties to al Qaeda.

In recent years, about 20 Somali-American men have traveled from the area to Somalia to train with the terror group, and some have gone on to fight with the militants, according to U.S. officials.